Flexible perovskite solar cells with an ion plated ITO electrode showed a higher power conversion efficiency and better flexibility than sputtered ITO-based perovskite solar cells.
The
state-of-the-art quantum dot (QD) based light-emitting diodes
(QD-LEDs) reach near-unity internal quantum efficiency thanks to organic
materials used for efficient hole transportation within the devices.
However, toward high-current-density LEDs, such as augmented reality,
virtual reality, and head-up display, thermal vulnerability of organic
components often results in device instability or breakdown. The adoption
of a thermally robust inorganic hole transport layer (HTL), such as
NiO, becomes a promising alternative, but the large energy offset
between the NiO HTL and the QD emissive layer impedes the efficient
operation of QD-LEDs. Here, we demonstrate bright and stable all-inorganic
QD-LEDs by steering the orientation of molecular dipoles at the surfaces
of both the NiO HTL and QDs. We show that the molecular dipoles not
only induce the vacuum level shift that helps alleviate the energy
offset between the NiO HTL and QDs but also passivate the surface
trap states of the NiO HTL that act as nonradiative recombination
centers. With the facilitated hole injection into QDs and suppressed
electron leakage toward trap sites in the NiO HTL, we achieve all-inorganic
QD-LEDs with high external quantum efficiency (6.5% at peak) and brightness
(peak luminance exceeding 77 000 cd/m2) along with
prolonged operational stability. The approaches and results in the
present study provide the design principles for high-performance all-inorganic
QD-LEDs suited for next-generation light sources.
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